It is a strange coincidence that the early days of 1800
correspond in a marked manner with the opening years of
1900.

As the Napoleonic War devastated Europe and caused
distress, poverty, and economic disturbances, a hundred
years ago - so the "Great War has laid waste
fruitful lands, slain the noblest of our sons, and
upset the whole fabric of our financial, industrial,
and commercial conditions".

A century before the battle of Waterloo the St. Keverne
labourers seem to have lived on the brink of starvation
- despite the fact that very often the father, mother
and children worked for wages.

Every kind of food was dear in those days, and dress
was expensive. The wages of an agricultural labourer
was from 6/- to 7/- per week, whilst that of his wife
was usually 6d per day of ten hours. Boys and girls
earned 2d or 4d per day.

The price of wheat made it in such cases unprocurable -
what bread they ate was made of barley. Bread and Scald
milk constituted their breakfast. For dinner pilchards
and potatoes at home ~ or a pasty with turnip potatoes
and fat bacon when out at work - furnished this chief
meal of the day. For supper barley bread and scald milk
appeased their hunger.

Water mills, such as the one on the north shore at
Coverack, ground the grain that the farmers sent,

How hard the labourers had to work may be shown by the
following: William Milden lived at Lanarth Gate. He
went to Tear Waste to work - wheeled three hundred
barrows of manure (a day's work). Then he took a
bag, walked to Penryn via Helford, bought half a bushel
of barley, brought it home on his back, got it ground
at Tregonnal Mill, waited to get it ground, brought it
back to his home on his back - all in a day. Date not
given,

The state of the working classes did not improve. As
the century advanced work itself became scarce.

In an entry in the Old Account Book under date 1764 we
find.

"At a public meeting at the House of Sampson
Incledon, Innkeeper, White Hart, to consider the state
of the poor of this parish, who are a heavy charge, and
for want of employ and by being dispersed in the
several villages of the parish, are become very
insolent and troublesome". It was resolved that
the churchwardens and overseers should contract with
Miles Exelby for the hire of a House for lodging,
maintaining, keeping and employing the Poor for a term
not exceeding 7 years. Six pounds was to be the rent
and for each poor person Exelby was to receive a sum
not exceeding 1/6 per week (not inclusive of medicine
and funeral expenses).

"Henceforth none should receive relief but such as
shall be willing to go to the Poor House. A sum not
exceeding 25/- per annum might be allowed to each
person for clothing". In cases of extreme
necessity persons in receipt from the Parish of not
more than 10/- per year besides - and house rent -
might remain outside.

There being, no unions, each parish was responsible for
its poor.

Sammy was a pious man who lived in the early part of
the 19th Century,

The chicken was clucking around after the manner of its
kind. Its sinful pride offended Sammy so to reduce the
fowl to a proper state of humiliation he plucked it
alive.

Vestry Date 12th Dec. 1821. It was Resolved that every
man wanting employment is to receive a list from the
Overseers and to begin to work with such person as the
overseers shall direct and to receive for his work from
his employer l0d per day, inferior labourers 8d. (if
the person is unable to maintain himself and his family
on his earnings the Vestry may give him some relief).
In the event of any labourer returning any day without
being employed the overseer is to find employment for
him.

Feb 4. 1822. No Boarman to have more than 14d per day.
On April 10th same year. We have the Election of a
Select Vestry,

"It is hereby resolved that a Select Vestry be
established and the undermentioned persons be appointed
to form the same for the time allowed (Act of
Parliament) in addition to the Minister, Churchwardens,
and Overseers of the Parish for the time being".

Thomas Rogers

- Trethans

Richard Mildren

- Trevean

John Barker

- Parc an tidno

John Roskruge

- Pennall

H. Pascoe

- Trenoweth

Thomas Roskruge

- Trenbraze

Henry Richards

- Arrowan

Henry Mark

- Grougwith

This extended Vestry was soon plunged in the midst of
work arising from the various applications of the poor.

On Oct. 10th 1822. The Vestry passed the following
momentous resolution which practically reduced the
labourers to serfdom.

"Resolved that the labourers shall work to any of
the farmers of this parish for the most money per day
any farmer will give. Such wages to be priced every
fortnight by the Select Vestry and no farmer shall be
allowed to agree with any labourer or employ him unless
he pay him full wages and be authorized to do so by the
Select Vestry.

Every labour man shall receive from the overseers so
much wages per day in addition to his wages paid by the
farmer so as to make his wages adequate to his family,
and no labourer shall have more wages than 1/- per day.

It was the above resolution that opened the door to a
shocking practice which brought at the time great
discredit on St. Keverne.

On Oct 14. 1822 there is a record of the men who were
knocked down to the different farmers for a fortnight,
and the prices they fetched.

The Select Vestry made up the wages of the married men
with families to 1/-. 1/1d. and ½d per day,
according to the number of children, and resolved that
no able man should be let on hire under 6d per day.

At the Michaelmas Meeting of the Vestry, when the
Report for the previous half year was read, it was
shown that a saving of 8 pounds 18shillings and 2
pence. had been effected on the weekly pay, and
"cloathing" provided.

Notwithstanding the increasing pauperism and the
poverty of the times, they felt it their duty to use
every exertion to detect imaposition, encourage
industry, and give to the aged and deserving poor every
comfort and support.

With respect to the labourers generally called
"Boarmen" they hoped to ensure for them
constant work and full wages.

Statement.

Weekly Pay

1821 for 6 months

99.

14.

8

1822

48.

10.

8

Total Expenditure in 1821 for 6
months

690.

2.

0¼

Total Expenditure in 1822 for 6 months

681.

4.

2½

Less than the former 6 months £

8.

18.

2d

Such were the effects of twenty years of warfare, the
disbanding of immense forces on sea and land, bad
harvests, selfish legislation, and the inherent
prejudice against the use of all machinery. No wonder
was it that the country was in a state of chaos and
that some of the sufferers took the law into their own
hands.

Wherever corn was stored hungry crowds were to be
found.

At Padstow five sloops filled with barley were sacked.
But as the cargoes were being carried away a company of
militia under Thomas Vyvyan, Esq , and Captain Jones
intercepted the marauders and rescued the booty.

Miners from Camborne, Redruth, Breage, Sithney and
Wendron went to the Helford River with the intention of
carrying away the corn stored at Bishop's Quay.
They too were surprised by a company of Sappers and
Miners stationed at The Dry Tree on Goonhilly Downs and
their plans were frustrated,

Bread riots were frequent and often the sky was red
with burning ricks of straw, corn and hay.

On the next sale of men in St. Keverne, Nov. 25. 1822.
the market was very flat.

In December there was evidently some uneasiness or
dissatisfaction evinced. At the next sale Jan 6. 1823.
9d was the top price and 3d the bottom.

Jan 23. 1823. It was resolved "That the Boarmen
shall be placed out to the , farmers in proportion to
their holdings according to the Parish Value Every able
man to be paid by the farmers to whom they are sent
ninepence per day and every inferior man sixpence per
day etc."

The following Lady day. The expenditure on the Relief
of Poor showed a decrease of 68. 6.10 on the wages
account and 53 .12.6d. on the clothing ditto.

But the cutting down of expenditure evidently led to
greater destitution.

Constables were appointed "in order to cheque and
suppress the system of depredation that had so long
existed in the district and to restrain the turbulence
of the disorderly in the said Parish of St.
Keverne",

The men chosen were Thomas Russell. Richard Mildren.
Richard Johns and Simon Roskiily,

On May 17, 1823. Elizabeth Lory was elected a member of
the Committee who a year previously had deemed it
necessary to import corn - especially barley for the
benefit of the poorer class immediately distressed.
Certificates were given to those in need which enabled
them to buy at less than cost price sufficient grain to
last them till harvest. In 1839 a New Act came into
force and a Board of Guardians was appointed

Total Distress Fund £ 1,010. 9. 0.

For nearly one hundred years grim poverty had rendered
the lives of those who lived on weekly earnings almost
unendurable. Men were little less than slaves, being
compelled to work for the Farmers.

The following entries in the Account Book reveal a
state of things which irritated employers, and provoked
the employed. Hunger, discomfort, often sickness, made
the men discontented and unruly. The women weary,
starving and worried, were cheerless and fretful.

Wars, bad harvests, a national debt of 800.million -
universal distress, a nation's exhaustion. The
Prohibition by Profiteers of imports of foreign corn
(less the price of wheat etc, should drop) brought
about riots and destruction,

July 23. 1837
Note:- John Hill, Coverack , took Dolly’s farm as
from the Michlemass at the rate of £5.3.0d p.a..
It should be optional with him either to keep the house
up or let it run down.

Entries from the Parochial Records
To John Taylor Straw for the bed 1d
To John Taylor Tapeing her shoes 1.0d
To shaving Thomas Gilberts children's heads 6d

The next entry shows that Tradesmen were not free
agents as regarded the taking of apprentices.

Received from Roskiliy for a fine for not taking
Thomasin Barker an apprentice £10. 0. 0.

Received of Jacob Lory a fine for not taking Thomasin
Barker an apprentice £10. 0. 0.

In 1800 John James had been paid the original cost of
purchase money and Deeds for the Poorhouse and
Premises. £24.7.6d.

The Poor
Copied from an old document.

1. There is no local Act for the Management of the Poor
in the Parish of St. Keverne!

2. Our Parish is not united or incorporated with others
for the Management of the Poor.

3. At present there is no board of guardians or an
elected Vestry. An open Vestry is held on the first
Monday in every month for the purpose of hearing the
disbursements of the overseers read over, and of
considering the wants of the poor, and of consulting
about the necessary burials of the Parish. The
Overseers call a special Vestry on any emergency by
public notice in the Church. At their Vestries any rate
payer who chooses may be present and deliver his
opinion and note.

4. There is a Poor House and two Cothouses belonging to
the Parish for the reception of paupers.

5. There is room for thirty persons in the Poorhouse,
for eight persons in the Cothouses. The greatest number
that has been in the Poorhouse at any one time is
Forty. The greatest number in the Cothouses at any one
time is 12.

6. We have no Rules or Regulations for the Management
of our Poorhouse.

7. There is a contract for supplying the Paupers in the
Poorhouse with food, washing, and fuel, at
1.10.0½d per head weekly.

8. The Contract being only for food, washing, and fuel,
and the Parish Apothecary supplying the medicine for
the Paupers in the Poorhouse in common with those who
are out-door paupers, and the clothing being charged in
the general expenses of the Parish, and not separately
for the Poorhouse, the eight query cannot be answered
accurately.

9. The Overseers give temporary relief to the able
bodied poor in the idle seasons of the year by
endeavouring to obtain employment for them, if they
cannot find employment, by money payments, but very
seldom by the payment of rent.

10. The Overseers endeavour to take some work such as
breaking up new land or hedging, from a neighbouring
farmer for the unemployed, or they are placed in a
Quarry to break stones for the road, or they are sent
to any of the farmers who are likely to require their
labour. If no employment can be obtained the able
bodied are paid in money at the rate of 7/6 weekly, for
a man, his wife and 3 or 4 or more children under the
age of 9 years, and at the rate of 6/- weekly for a man